None of this means that Chrome intends to leave us hanging, though. Citing stats from last year, it notes that only 3% of Chrome users complained of malware, and a measly 0.06% of Cleanup Tool scans flagged unwanted software. Simply put, Google insists the Cleanup Tool just isn’t that useful for Chrome users anymore. Google is beginning to deprecate the Chrome Cleanup Tool, starting with the current release, Chrome 111. In its lifetime, Chrome users put the tool to use 80 million times, a small number considering how many Chrome users there are. Google introduced the Chrome Cleanup Tool almost a decade ago, in 2015, as a means for reverting undesired changes to Chrome settings and removing associated malware from your computer.
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